Welcome to Women in Politics: College Edition, where promising women leaders in student government on college and university campuses across the country will be featured on msnbc.com. Ariel Koren has been nominated to represent the University of Pennsylvania as a leader making a difference not only through key issues on campus, but in bridging the gender gap in politics.
As part of msnbc’s “Women in Politics” series, these hand-selected women become part of a larger discussion of women candidates and women’s issues on a national level. “Women in Politics” features newsmaker interviews, profiles, photos, and deep dives into the key conversations.
Name: Ariel Koren
School: University of Pennsylvania
Hometown: Jacksonville, Florida
Concentration: East Asian Languages and Civilizations
Role in Student Government: President of the Class of 2015
Dream job: Working at the private-public sector nexus to increase cultural competency in the United States
Class year: 2015
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What is your biggest challenge as a leader on campus?
One challenge specifically associated with my experiences as a female leader is figuring out how to find the balance between celebrating my identity as a woman with being an effective leader in general. I seek to overcome this by viewing my identity as a woman as a leadership opportunity rather than a leadership challenge. Being a woman in leadership has been empowering and emboldening in many ways because I have emerged into networks of incredibly inspiring and strong women leaders and also because I have been afforded meaningful opportunities to speak out against issues that disproportionately affect women and other historically marginalized groups while also supporting and advocating for my class in its entirety.
My class has 2600+ students and my job as class president is to advocate for and unify all of us through programming that is accessible, engaging, safe, and fun for everyone. The most exciting challenge has been to find ways to truly be a voice for everyone when our class is so diverse; I think I rise to this challenge by celebrating our diversity and by listening to the needs and insights and stories of as many people as possible.
Currently, Penn’s senior class board is spearheading a staple senior Penn tradition called Feb Club where the class attends a large scale event on 22 consecutive nights during the month of February. We leverage this tradition to bring the entire class together in celebration of unity. The unique talents of all 12 fellow board members and our board’s dynamic and teamwork skills have allowed us to create a lineup of 22 events ranging from a classwide trip to Atlantic City to a classwide trip to the Philadelphia Orchestra: a lineup so diverse that there truly is something for everybody.
Which female leaders do you draw inspiration from?
Too many to name! A few who come to mind are Edith Windsor, Emma Sulkowicz, Janet Mock, and Lupita Nyong’o. Edith Windsor because her story catalyzed the marriage equality movement in the US at the time when I was coming out to family and friends. Emma Sulkowicz because I am one of so many who have been made to feel empowered and galvanized to action by her senior thesis art endurance piece “Mattress Performance: Carry That Weight” through which she carries a mattress everywhere she goes on Columbia’s campus to symbolize the pain and injustice endured by sexual assault survivors. I’m also so inspired by the powerful writer and trans activist Janet Mock, because her memoir “Redefining Realness” speaks her truth so bravely and boldly, and I aspire to be so brave! And Lupita Nyong’o who closed her 2014 Oscar acceptance speech with what is now amongst my favorite quotes: “no matter where you’re from, your dreams are valid”.








